Astronomy Festival on the National Mall June 2

In Washington, DC, on Friday, June 2, 2017 , from 6-11 p.m. visitors to the nation’s capital will be able to look to the skies with professional telescopes as part of the free Eighth Annual Astronomy Festival on the National Mall (AFNM) , N. of the Washington Monument; 15th Street NW and Constitution Ave, across from the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Rain location: School Without Walls High School 2130 G St. NW.

AFNM is the largest astronomy event on the National Mall (7,000-10,000 people expected), and is sponsored by Hofstra University. AFNM features day/night close-up views of the Sun, Moon, Jupiter, and Saturn with 25 optical and radio telescopes; planetarium shows under a 25-foot dome; astronomical image exhibits, videos, and interactive hands-on activities presented by science and educational organizations. Join experts and educators from national organizations, universities, museums, astronomy clubs, and federal agencies who will also answer questions about careers in science, celestial objects and events, and the latest astronomical discoveries. Watch a National Science Foundation video of the 2014 event,

The AFNM will present Voyager, a dance interpretation of the NASA Voyager 1 and 2 missions and the “golden records” which traveled with them, by Neshamah - a modern dance company. This piece is to take on the broad theme of astronomy and investigate it through music, dance, and visual elements in a collaboration of the arts and science. The phonograph records contain sounds and images selected to portray the diversity of life and culture on Earth, and are intended for any intelligent extraterrestrial life form, or for future humans, who may find them.

Participating Science Organizations: The American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Association of Physics Teachers, American Physical Society, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Carnegie Science/Carnegie Academy for Science Education (CASE), Celestial Charts,, International Dark Sky Association, NASA - Goddard Space Flight Center, National Air and Space Museum, National Center for Earth and Space Science Education, National Radio Astronomy Observatory, National Science Foundation, Naval Research Laboratory, Science for Society & the Public, Society of Physics Students, Space Telescope Science Institute, and the US Naval Observatory.